Voyage to the Prehistoric Planet

1965
3.8| 1h18m| NA| en| More Info
Released: 01 August 1965 Released
Producted By: Roger Corman Productions
Country: United States of America
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Info

In 2020, after the colonization of the moon, the spaceships Vega, Sirius and Capella are launched from Lunar Station 7. They are to explore Venus under the command of Professor Hartman, but an asteroid collides and explodes Capella. The leader ship Vega stays orbiting and sends the astronauts Kern and Sherman with the robot John to the surface of Venus, but they have problems with communication with Dr. Marsha Evans in Vega. The Sirius lands in Venus and Commander Brendan Lockhart, Andre Ferneau and Hans Walter explore the planet and are attacked by prehistoric animals. They use a vehicle to seek Kern and Sherman while collecting samples from the planet. Meanwhile John helps the two cosmonauts to survive in the hostile land.

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Director

Curtis Harrington

Production Companies

Roger Corman Productions

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Voyage to the Prehistoric Planet Audience Reviews

Steineded How sad is this?
Pacionsbo Absolutely Fantastic
Bea Swanson This film is so real. It treats its characters with so much care and sensitivity.
Abbigail Bush what a terribly boring film. I'm sorry but this is absolutely not deserving of best picture and will be forgotten quickly. Entertaining and engaging cinema? No. Nothing performances with flat faces and mistaking silence for subtlety.
Leofwine_draca A lightweight but fun old-fashioned adventure movie which has the very clichéd plot of a group of astronauts landing on a remote planet (bizarrely, Venus) and finding themselves terrorised by a variety of alien life. That's it. The end of the story. The rest of the film consists of various crew members trying to make their way back to their ship and being threatened by monsters, plants, the weather, and an erupting volcano. This is a lively little film which is confusing in parts, mainly due to the fact that it was initially a Russian film (called PLANETA BURG) which Roger Corman then got hold of, dubbed and added in extra scenes with actors Basil Rathbone and Faith Domergue, located in static sets and basically commenting on the action as it happens. Although this gives the movie a disjointed feel, the process works as a whole.The first thing we witness as the movie starts are some wobbly, miniature spaceships flying through the stars. Now this won't give George Lucas any sleepless nights but is however a nice attempt at creating a science fiction tale; I'm a big fan of special effects in whatever form they take and these are a good effort. We're introduced to the astronauts, a group of men who all look the same and are never really characterised in any way, shape or form. However, it is good to see Basil Rathbone (bizarrely looking a lot like Peter Cushing here) in action as a professor giving the orders, and it's nice that the sprightly 70-year old was still clinging to his roots at his age. American starlet Faith Domergue also appears as a token female who doesn't really benefit the plot in any way.Also introduced is a very cool giant humanoid robot, one of the coolest you'll ever see perhaps. He even gives Robby the Robot a run for his money. The robot will play a key part in the film later on. As well as him, there are lots of cheap bits of sci-fi gimmickry, like weird pinging noises and scales and monitors which are meant to mean something. One scene I did like was when one of the astronauts turns on an outside microphone and hears a load of eerie wailing noises. Probably the best thing about this movie is the design of the planet. Venus is portrayed as a desert-like barren land, populated by the occasional hill, mountain, or pool. It's also extremely misty and contains apparent sentient vegetation in places. Hilariously, once outside, one of the explorers dips his hand into a pool he discovers (at one point I thought he was going to drink up!) - who's to say that the liquid isn't acidic? At this point we are introduced to the first "monster", a very well-designed giant tentacled plant which threatens to devour one of the men.From then on, the group gets split up and explore the landscape. In their travels they discover a group of violent reptile men who attempt to kill them and are themselves killed, a brontosaurus (!) which they take a blood sample from (!!), and an evil flying reptile which attempts to destroy their amusing hover car. At one point they venture underwater where they discover an eerie, ruby-eyed bronze idol of the flying reptile and a hilarious white octopus. Anyway, what can I say? It goes without saying that this film is only to be watched by bad film fans who don't mind a few dodgy effects here and there and are willing to suspend their disbelief in the interests of entertainment. Saying that, the Russian special effects guys actually do a very good job in creating a world populated by all kinds of danger (my favourite creatures has to be the brontosaurus though). Also, a very atmospheric landscape in my opinion too. It's just a shame that we don't get to know or care about the astronauts at all. That would have made some of the dangerous situations more exciting. Otherwise, this is a perfectly perfunctory little B-movie enlivened by a great visual look.
mark.waltz What seems to be Red Planet Mars is actually Venus in all her pre-historic glory where dinosaurs, large lizards (looking like sleeztacks from "Land of the Lost") and Venus Flytraps the size of a cow are able to survive on a planet that science has determined is way too hot for anything to flourish on let alone earthlings. But in the mind of some filmmaker with great dramatic license, that's all hogwash and men can not only go there, they can drive around in a souped-up sports car that can fly several feet off the ground without the benefit of wheels. The drive-in crowd may have loved this sort of thing, but they could also find other things to occupy their time with during boring sequences. Sillier than even Ed Wood's most hideous "Z" graders, this will make you laugh at the total ridiculousness of it, especially the obvious stock footage and the hairstyle that Howard Hughes' former protégée, Faith Domergue, must wear, which resembles an out-of-shape Viking helmet that was spray painted black. Basil Rathbone is also on for a few meaningless scenes. Poorly photographed with hollow sound, this film's acting highlight is by the creatures who thanks to a lack of dialog give better performances than the human actors.
Michael O'Keefe Directed and written by Curtis Harrington, a mediocre sci-fi flick from Roger Corman Productions. It is the year 2020 and there is already colonies on the moon and now an international team will take three spacecraft to explore Venus. The story is surprisingly entertaining. Roger Corman spliced in special effects and footage from two other movies; one a Russian feature and the other his own QUEEN OF BLOOD. Cheesy in most respects...it is 1965 after all, but very good example of American drive-in fare. Aging veteran actor Basil Rathbone was talked into a meager starring role with support from Faith Domergue, Christopher Brand and Marc Shannon.
sddavis63 What can I say. It's a trip down memory lane to the sorts of sci-fi movies that would pop up on television back in the early 70's - in other words, pretty bad, but you should know what you're getting into. In a nostalgic sort of way, it's even kind of fun to watch, since it brings back memories of being a kid in the early 70's. There's the terrible "plastic toys" special effects to show the spaceship as it flies to Venus, there's the unconvincing monsters on Venus, including a rag-tag collection of raptor-like creatures that, for lack of a better word, seem to hop and dance around the astronauts. There's a strange sound that one of the guys thinks is a girl calling to him, and a kind of cool robot - not as cool as the one on "Lost In Space," though. The plot is strange, and some points make no sense. ("The oxygen is 4.7." "That's OK." Then, why do they wear oxygen tanks throughout, if that's OK? Or, this one. "It's good to feel weight again." I understand the reference to weightlessness, except these guys have been walking around on their spaceship perfectly normally up to that point.) And, what's with some of this being dubbed into English, while some of it is actually spoken in English? In the end, yeah - it's bad. For the nostalgia value alone - 2/10.